Tag Archives: marketing

Do you have an Image strategy?

3 Apr

Pinterest, Instagr.am, and even Facebook have shown us that your IMAGE matters. There’s a pun here. In advertising, we’ve always said this. Campaigns have always been judged on how they look. Brands have always done better if they contribute positively to a consumer’s image. Brands = Image. So it’s no surprise really that marketing online now requires you to consider an image strategy.

“Readers process more information more quickly from images than from text, and thus images drive more audience engagement than text content.” AdAge 

The article asks three questions when developing an image strategy:

1. Audience engagement. How can images increase engagement among my existing audience?

2. Audience acquisition. How can I convert that engagement into sharing?

3. Revenue. How does the strategy help me make more money?

If you’re in marketing, are you managing brands on Pinterest or Instagr.am? How does your brand’s image online fit into your overall strategy?

The ROI of Social Media

5 Apr

It’s been around for a while, but can anyone (Besides Dell and Best Buy) put a hard number to the efforts they’ve made in social media?

I’d beg to say that they can’t, and that’s why I love the latest article from eMarketer: “What Brand Marketers Expect From Social Media Followers.”

“Research suggests that many are moving on from the search for a hard number.”

The top values for, and dare I say “reasons” for acquiring, fans are far from a pricepoint. Insights, loyalty, advocacy, engagement, and popularity – ALL achieve with a Facebook page = bang for you buck! Sure a Facebook page takes more time to maintain, figuring out what works for your brand and your fans is far from scientifically proven. So you try things out, experiment a little; risk and you shall receive. Isn’t that always been how it is with advertising that makes us say “wow”?

So, if you’re sitting around the office table trying to answer the client’s request to “show me the ROI,” ask yourselves this: do we want a Facebook Page for the right reasons? Because immediate sales has never been social media’s strong suit.

What do you think? What IS the ROI of social media?

Vendor or Agency?

13 Jan

What are you – really? …think about it.

An agency produces ideas. It’s a “boutique” shop that businesses & companies hire to THINK about their business and help them make it better. Thinking about a business, how it runs, how it makes money, who walks in their doors, why those people buy something at all, etc. produces IDEAS.

A vendor is a service. You outsource to them, because you don’t have the resources in-house to complete the project you want to. When you’re searching for a vendor, you’re looking for the best PRICE for the most VALUE.

So, you – who works for an “agency” – what role do you play most often with your clients?

Planning for digital

23 Jul

Borrowed from theplanninglab.typepad.com

Was passed What digital planning is not by my director here, and I wanted to share the following quote with ya’ll (yep, been living in Texas for almost 3 years now  “ya’ll” is creeping in).

Digital covers so many spaces – it IS NOT about online, mobile screens or phone apps….It is first and foremost about INTERACTIVISM (I think he meant to say INTERACTION) – communication + conversation between consumer and brand – where exchange, participation, engagement and interaction are made possible through the CREATIVE application of TECHNOLOGY.

I really like how this puts digital in perspective. It’s not as channel-specific as clients or agencies may describe it to be. It’s not a medium but rather a way of thinking. This is where planning can really play a role.

Go to it. Plan for digital and let me know how you think it should be done.

Understanding the Value of Social Media

30 Jun

What’s the value of social media? We all know it has value, or else we wouldn’t be knee deep in it every day, but what is its value really?

Part of my journey to answering this question included reading Nielsen’s Advertising Effectiveness report: Understanding the Value of a Social Media Impression. In it they discuss how paid media should complement earned media – that allusive term that used to be owned solely by PR. But that was then, and this is now.

“Marketers are moving from a broadcast-based marketing relationship with consumers to a relationship that more explicitly considers how traditional paid media drives “earned media” – where consumers directly engage with the marketing messages and pass them along to their friends.”

People now (let’s not call them consumers till they’re actually consuming) almost expect to be able to interact with companies and brands online. They want their voices heard and their problems addressed. So what’s the value of having people engage with your message rather than just look at it or be impressionized? (that’s a made up word, but you know what I mean)

Nielsen says that on Facebook, there are three kinds of impressions: standard paid impressions, paid impressions that contain social information, and earned impressions that happen as a result of a Facebook user engaging with an ad. (for the un-initiated, this last one is the Holy Grail of social media). As we all know, advertising seeks to influence: we want it to reach and impact a target audience. Nielsen says that earned impressions have the highest level of impact on behavior but that reach is difficult to achieve with earned media along.

“The key to success for marketers is creating a mix of social impressions that incorporate both paid and earned media. The consumer is now invited to broadcast, and hopefully endorse, the brand to their online friends. As a result, brands are turning to the tools and advertising opportunities provided by social media outlets.”

Let’s focus on the word “tools” for a minute. Have you heard of branded utility? Essentially, you create something people can use. If it’s on a regular basis, that’s even better. Branded utility gives people an experience, just like “social” media does. As marketers we should be including tools, like branded utility and social media, in the marketing mix. Why? Because people are more likely to talk about an experience than they are a stalemate print ad or billboard.

What’s the #1 tool/branded utility in the world right now? Facebook. Mark and his crew have done a great job at providing a wide range of tools for brands and fans to use:

  • applications
  • discussion boards
  • ratings & review tabs
  • status updates that can be liked, commented on, and shared
  • social ads
  • Facebook Connect
  • etc.

And marketers love it! By using these tools, alongside people on a daily/weekly basis, brands can raise awareness, increase purchase intent, and enhance recall.

So there we have it. The true value of social media is producing a change in behavior thus having an impact, raising awareness, increasing purchase intent, and therefore, enhancing recall ALL while reaching your target audience and their corresponding networks of friends, acquaintances, and likeminded individuals.

Very effective stuff this social media. :)

Another step for mobile

12 Dec

We all have our cellphones on us these days, because they’re not just phones anymore; they’re clocks, watches, email services, a gossip channel, a dating service, a marketing device, and now…they’re coupon transmitters. With 7-Eleven’s Test “text coupon” for Slurpees in the San Diego service, their marketing department says this:

“Our marketing programs try to reach them where they are. Mobile marketing is the next step to reach our target customers—the millennials who don’t go anywhere without their mobile phones.”

Oh millennials. GMR marketing owns the mobile couponing platform in this test.

What kinds of objectives do companies hope to achieve with mobile? Mobile Marketing Watch says increasing customer loyalty AND amping up database numbers for mobile marketing programs (customer relationship management)  in the future are two things we’ll see more companies and brands asking for in 2010.

With this quote from 7-Eleven’s marketing manager:

“Our consumers are mobile; therefore, it’s critical that we communicate with them where they are,” said Daniel May, marketing manager at 7-Eleven.

It really shouldn’t be any surprise that mobile will explode in 2010.

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